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New 'entertainment' PCs restrict copying

By Joe Wilcox
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 3, 2002, 5:58 AM PT

Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard on Tuesday released additional details about 
digital entertainment PCs coming for the holidays. But new anti-copying 
technology could hamper sales, say analysts and potential buyers.

The new consumer computers run Windows XP Media Center Edition, a 
variation of Microsoft's flagship operating system. Besides normal PC 
functions, Windows Media Center PCs offer a second user interface through 
which people can access the operating systems' digital media features via 
a remote control. HP, as well as Samsung, will start offering the new 
systems sometime before the holiday-shopping season, with HP's models 
selling in the high $1,500 range to around $2,000.

Microsoft sees Windows Media Center PCs as ideal for college students or 
young urbanites living in cramped spaces where a combination computing and 
entertainment system might be more appealing than separate devices. 
Besides digital photo, music and movie features already available with 
Windows XP, the new PCs also would serve as TV tuners and digital video 
recorders (DVRs) for copying TV shows to the computer's hard drive.

But Microsoft has included copy-protection with the operating system that 
uses encryption to lock recorded TV shows to the PC. Already, consumers 
can legally record television programs to VHS tapes for personal use and 
view them on another VCR in the household. Microsoft has taken a more 
conservative approach by thwarting the sharing of programs recorded 
digitally. That strategy might make sense as Microsoft attempts to attract 
Hollywood movie studios with its digital rights management and 
anti-copying technologies. But consumers may not react favorably to the 
copy protection, say analysts.

"You have to applaud their efforts (on copyright protection). But this is 
not a mainstream product, particularly if you're going to limit it where 
consumers are not going to be able to share that digital media between 
their DVD players and other devices," said ARS analyst Toni Duboise. "To 
take that (copying) flexibility away from consumers is a big mistake. 
There's no way consumers are going to like this proprietary way of doing 
business."

Von Ehman, a Windows user and an analyst for West Virginia state 
government in Charleston, also balked at the copy-protection mechanism.
"If you copy protect in any way, the kids will scream bloody murder," he 
said. "It's a young person's market, and that would be a suicide" for 
Microsoft in the marketplace.
Ehman, who is a musician, said that "99 percent" of all the copying he has 
seen is for personal use or archiving purposes. "I believe it 
(copying/dubbing) is, for the most part, harmless and in a positive sense 
actually promotes the product for the artist or business, be it music or 
video."

Jodie Cadiuex, marketing manager of Windows Media Center, defends 
Microsoft's decision to copy protect TV programs recorded to the PC's hard 
drive.

"Microsoft is in a leadership position here where we've got an opportunity 
to help Hollywood feel comfortable with digital distribution and to help 
them develop (digital rights management) solutions so consumers can have 
content everywhere," she said. "We have two relationships we have to 
balance here: the consumer who wants the content and Hollywood so they 
feel comfortable with that process and don't clamp down and make that 
impossible."
Convergence computing
Microsoft introduced the new version of Windows, code-named Freestyle, 
during January's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The company 
released Window XP Media Center Edition to PC manufacturers last week, 
after the release of Service Pack 1--the first collection of Windows XP 
updates and bug fixes.

HP's version, dubbed Media Center PC, is expected to sell for $1,500 to 
$2,000 without a monitor, depending on the configuration. HP would not 
disclose final model details but said that each PC would come with at 
least a 2GHz Pentium 4 processor, 512MB of RAM, 100GB or more of storage, 
a DVD+R/RW drive, a CD-ROM drive, a 64MB Nvidia GeForce 4 graphics card, a 
Creative Labs Audigy sound card, five USB 2.0 and two FireWire ports, and 
200-watt Klipsch speakers--Pro Media 2.1 on most models and the 5.1 
version on the $2,000 PC.

The HP Media Center PC also will feature a 6-in-1 media reader, supporting 
Smart Media and Sony Memory Stick cards, among other portable storage 
options.

Besides access to the digital media features through the keyboard or 
remote control, the digital media user interface can be brought up by any 
one of five buttons on the front of the PC. These access the five main 
digital media features: music, pictures, photos, DVD and TV.

"Our target audience is anyone who sees a place anywhere in the home where 
there's a need for a PC and a TV or an entertainment center," said Mark 
Bony, HP's Pavilion PC product manager. "We're also targeting 
consumers--students or small apartment dwellers, where space is a 
premium."

While the features are compelling, analysts predict that the 
digital-entertainment PCs will be, at best, niche products for a number 
reasons.

"Everyone's been waiting for the great convergence product," Duboise said. 
"This is putting the PC as a replacement device for the television, but 
it's not there yet. People are not ready to replace their televisions with 
their PCs."

Duboise also questioned whether the audience is simply too small to begin 
with. "This is a young audience, maybe those who are starting out or 
high-techies. It's going to be a small audience. It certainly isn't going 
to be mainstream."

Microsoft and HP also face a challenge because of the system's pricing, 
despite the abundance of high-end hardware. Consumer craving for expensive 
PCs has not been great, given the economy and other factors. Year to date, 
the average selling price of retail PCs has been $824, according to 
NPDTechworld. That is about half the price of the entry-level HP Media 
Center PC. PCs priced $1,500 and above accounted for only about 4.5 
percent of the retail PC market. In that range, the average selling price 
is $1,577 so far this year.

"I think the numbers kind of speak for themselves," said NPDTechworld 
analyst Stephen Baker.
Overprotective options
Analysts and users see the built-in copy protection as a potential sales 
killer because it restricts the use of the built-in DVR, one of the most 
compelling features of the new PCs.

DVRs, which are sold as companion products for TVs by TiVo and Sonicblue's 
ReplayTV, are expected to become standard equipment on PCs over the next 
few years, say analysts.

Already Sony ships Vaio PCs with DVRs and most of the other features found 
on the HP Media Center PC. But Sony does not impose copy protection. So a 
consumer could use Sony's GigaPocket Personal Video Recorder software to 
record a TV show, convert the file to MPEG-2 video with another Sony 
application and burn the program to a DVD.

Don Simon, a Windows user from Seattle, Wash., recently bought a Vaio 
RX780G PC. The avid TiVo user has networked other PCs to the Vaio, so he 
can "seamlessly watch TV on any PC in my house. If Microsoft comes out 
with a product that does less than Sony's, I'd be skeptical of its 
success. I certainly wouldn't buy it."

Meta Group analyst Steve Kleynahans said that Microsoft made the decision 
to put in the copy protection fairly far along in the development of 
Windows XP Media Center Edition.

"I know this wasn't in the product all along," he said. "I think it was 
Microsoft being overcautious. I really think it's unfortunate because it 
does hamper the functionality and usability of the platform."

Cadiuex acknowledged Microsoft took the risk of alienating some customers 
with its copying restrictions.

"We don't make these decisions in a vacuum, not considering the potential 
responses from our consumers," she said. "They're difficult decisions to 
make, especially when you know somewhere down the line that certainly not 
the majority, but some, of the people aren't going to be thrilled."

Microsoft might have good reason to be cautious given, Hollywood's tough 
stance toward the computer industry and a ReplayTV lawsuit related to 
sharing content.

"You've got a company that itself depends on its own intellectual property 
not being copied taking technical steps to prevent the intellectual 
property of other companies from being illegally copied," said Rich Gray, 
a Menlo Park, Calif.-based intellectual property attorney. "There is good 
strong case law, mainly the Sony Betamax case, that you, a single user, 
can make a recording of a TV show for your own personal use. What 
Microsoft has done is allow that capability while imposing a technical fix 
that will prevent copies from being made that are clearly illegal or are 
at least in a gray area."

Matt Rosoff, a Directions on Microsoft analyst, sees another motivation at 
work and one that has more to do with future business prospects than 
concerns about customer dissatisfaction or potential legal problems.

"Microsoft generally believes that digital entertainment, digital media, 
is the thing that's going to drive the next cycle of PC upgrades," he 
said. "There's not that much more new you can do with your PC that you're 
not already doing."

Microsoft hopes to sell Hollywood its digital rights management 
technology. At the same time, the company doesn't want Hollywood to use 
its marketing or legal muscle to shut the PC out of digital entertainment.

"If the content owners look at the PC as this Wild West where the content 
and intellectual property is stolen, the content owners will try to get 
around the PC," Rosoff said. "That's something Microsoft wouldn't want to 
see happen."

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